Personal tools
You are here: Home Resources Research Resources
« September 2008 »
September
MoTuWeThFrSaSu
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930
Contact

David Barnhill, Director
Environmental Studies Program

313 Swart Hall
University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
800 Algoma Blvd.
Oshkosh, WI 54901

Phone: (920) 424-1397
Fax: (920) 424-1418
E-mail:es@uwosh.edu

 

Research Resources

"Where do I find sources for research in environmental studies?" There are many sources that are in our library. For starters, check the following.

ARTICLES IN NEWSPAPERS

Do you want to see what has been reported in newspapers about your issue? Do you want to find opinion pieces about the issue?
Use Lexis-Nexis Academic. Go to the Polk Library Home Page, click on the drop down box "List of Library Search Tools," and click on Lexis-Nexis Academic. Click here for the Polk Library guide to using Lexis-Nexus.

Or you can search specific newspapers. For example,
> Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel (this has the most environmental reporting in Wisconsin -- especially investigative reporting).
> Wisconsin State Journal (Madison)
> Capital Times (a smaller, progressive newspaper in Madison)
> Green Bay Press-Gazette
>
Oshkosh Northwestern
> Chicago Tribune
> Christian Science Monitor
> Los Angeles Times
> New York Times
> Washington Post
> Other news sources in the United States

Don't forget to consider international news sources (all in English)
> World Newspapers is a portral to newspapers from around the globe
> British news sources
> Chinese news sources
> French news sources
> German news sources
> Indian news sources
> Japanese news sources

ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS WEBSITES

Some of these sites have archives you can use to research news reports from previous months and years. For intance, check out the following:
>> Earthtimes.org news archive
>> Environment News Service news archive
>> Environment News Service search engine
>> Environmental News Network news archive
>> Green At Work news archive
>> Planet Ark news archive

NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS (NGOs)

These can be a goldmine of information, especially those that are science-based. Some cover a narrow range of issues; others are much broader. Here are just some, but see "Web Resources" for more:
Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change (IPCC)
Union of Concerned Scientists

World Resources Institute
Worldwatch Institute

Some of these sites also have research libraries:
>> World Resources Institute: Earth Trends research library
>> Worldwatch Institute research library

GOVERNMENT SOURCES

Do you want to find government documents (state, national, international) concerning your issue? What governmental agencies may have information?

Use the UWO library catalog search engine.
> Set limits by clicking "CLICK HERE to set limits" on the right side of the screen. Here you can limit a search to State and International Documents or U.S. Documents in the category of "Location." You can also limit it by "Place of Publication" (e.g. Wisconsin).
After you set your limits, click the "Set Limits" button at the bottom.
> This will return you to the catalog search page, where you can search, by keyword, subject, title, author, etc.

Also consider websites of specific govermental agencies. They should have a search engine.
> Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources . This has a search engine, where you can search a topic, such as "hazardous waste" (put quotes around the words).
> University of Wisconsin Extension may have helpful information.
> U.S. Department of Agriculture
> U.S. Department of Energy
> U.S. Department of Interior
> U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) .
> U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Department of Interior)
> U.S. Forest Service (Department of Agriculture)
> National Center for Environmental Health
> for other Federal agencies, see Web Resources webpage.

If your topic has any international dimension, be sure to look at the many, many webpages at the United Nations. In particular, become familiar with the United Nations Environmental Programme.

SCHOLARLY ARTICLES

Looking for articles by scholars on your issue?
Use the search engines listed at the UWO library website, in the category "Know where you want to search?" This has a list of research engines. Particularly relevant are the following:

Academic Search Elite
> Highlighted on the library home page (also listed as “Academic Search”).
Applied Science Full Text (also listed as Applied Science and Technology)
Biological and Agricultural Index
Business Full Text
Environmental Science
General Science Full Text
Humanities Full Text
Readers’ Guide Full Text
Social Science Full Text
> These sources are found on the “List of Library Search Tools.” Once you are in one of these search engines, you can go to the top of the page and click on “Open Database Selection Area.” You will then be able to search more than one of these tools simultaneously (Academic Search is not included).

BOOKS

Do you want to find what books have been published that relate to your project?

1. Search the UWO Polk Library catalog, using keyword, subject, etc.
2 1. Go to the library website of a large university (e.g. University of Wisconsin Madison, University of California) or the Library of Congress . You can search for books using keyword, subject, etc.
3. Use World Cat. Go to library homepage. Check in the “List of Library Search Tools.” World Cat is the last entry. Bring that up and search there.
> If you find a book that looks particularly relevant, see if UWO's Polk Library has it. If they don't, see if the U.W. system does in Universal Borrowing. If they don't, you can order the book through Interlibrary Loan.

ENVIRONMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS

Do you need to find what various environmental organizations have said about a particular issue?

See the "Web Resources" webpage in this UWO ES website for a list of websites for state and national environmental organizations, news outlets, advocacy magazines, and online science journals.

SEARCH ENGINES

Rachel's (Environmental Research Foundation)

OTHER WEBSITES

Do you want to find the positions and statements of corporations and political parties?

Universities: Sometimes universities have helpful information. If your focus is Wisconsin, try websites of UW Stevens Point, UW Green Bay, UW Madison, UW Milwaukee.

Corporations: Go to the websites of specific corporations relevant to your research. They probably give a perspective on the issues that differs from environmental organizations.

Political parties: Political parties usually have divergent platforms and press releases on a variety of environmental issues. Go to their websites and find their platform and releases.
> Democratic Party
> Green Party of the U.S
> Republican Party
> Wisconsin Green Party

ENVIRONMENTAL JOURNALS AT POLK LIBRARY

Want to look at journals in print for that are relevant to environmental issues? Look for the following journals in the UWO Polk Library.

Business Strategy and the Environment
Capitalism, Nature, Socialism
Ecological Application
Ecological Monographs
Ecological Restoration
Ecologist
Ecology
Environment
Environment and Behavior
Environmental Conservation
Environmental Ethics
Environmental Geology
Environmental History
Environmental Science and Technology
Environmental Values
Ethics, Place, and the Environment
Greenpeace
Journal of Animal Ecology
Journal of Applied Ecology
Journal of Ecology
Journal of Environmental Education
Journal of Environmental Health
Journal of Wildlife Management
Mother Jones
Natural History
Natural Resources
Nature
Onearth
Population and Environment
Restoration Ecology
Water Environmental Research
Worldviews

Document Actions